EBOOK

The Book of Yerba Mate

A Stimulating History

Christine Folch
5
(1)
Pages
264
Year
2024
Language
English

About

The untold story of South America's most interesting beverage

Brewed from the dried leaves and tender shoots of an evergreen tree native to South America, yerba mate gives its drinkers the jolt of liquid effervescence many of us get from coffee or tea. In Argentina, southern "gaúcho" Brazil, Paraguay, and Uruguay, mate is the stimulating brew of choice, famously quaffed by the Argentine national football team en route to its 2022 FIFA World Cup victory. In The Book of Yerba Mate, Christine Folch offers a wide-ranging exploration of the world's third-most popular naturally stimulating beverage. Folch discusses who drinks mate, and why, and whether this earthier caffeinated drink with its promise of a different buzz and a more authentic, spiritual connection to place can find a market niche beyond South America.

Folch traces yerba mate's odysseys across the globe, from South America to the Middle East and North America. She discovers that mate inspired the world's first written tango, powered early Jesuit and German nationalist utopias, ignited one of modern history's most devastating wars, and fueled Catholic conspiracies. And, Folch reports, mate is currently starring in puppet shows put on by Syrian dissidents.

By tracing yerba mate production and consumption as they change over time and place, from precolonial Indigenous beginnings to the present, Folch unravels the processes of commodification and their countervailing forces to show how accidents of botany intersect with political economic systems and personal taste. The stories behind the caffeinated infusions we prefer, she finds, are nothing less than the story of how the modern world is put together. Christine Folch is the Bacca Foundation Associate Professor of Cultural Anthropology at Duke University. She is the author of Hydropolitics: The Itaipu Dam, Sovereignty, and the Engineering of Modern South America (Princeton). "This is one of the most original, interesting, and well-written books that I have had the privilege to read in a while. We have plenty of biographies of coffee and tea; this book restores their neglected cousin, yerba mate, to its rightful place. By following the story of mate, this book lets us see Latin America, empire, race, and religion in a new light."-Frank Trentmann, author of Empire of Things



"Yerba mate and its close botanical relatives guayusa and yaupon are among the most widely distributed and readily available psychoactive plants you may have never heard of. With precision and wit, Folch traces their circulation, continual resignification, enduring fascination, and occasional denigration, through space and time, empire and culture. In revealing these plants' hidden stories, she reveals to us something about our own."-Eduardo Kohn, author of How Forests Think "A fascinating study that opens a window onto the bigger thematic landscape of colonialism, consumption and market capitalism."---Oliver Balch, Times Literary Supplement "The research is thorough, the story compelling, and the prose accessible and highly engaging. A clear narrative thread makes the book's ambitious thematic, chronological, and geographic scope appear effortless, adventurous, and enlightening. . . . Highly recommended"

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